Perry Anderson reflects on his experience of the Moscow coup, and of its failure, and considers Gorbachev’s failure and success
Perry Anderson, 26 September 1991
“... The people are exulting’ – narod likuyet. The phrase was spoken with impassive distance – perhaps even irony – by a heavily-armed commando in the White House, as we looked down at the first, still rather scattered and tentative outbursts of revelry among the crowds camped in the night below round the Russian Parliament. There was still no hard news of what had happened in the Crimea, but by the evening of 21 August the rumour outside was already of victory ... ”